Article by
Barbados Today

Published on
June 8, 2017

WASHINGTON –– Ex-FBI chief James Comey told Congress that the Trump administration’s comments about him and the FBI were “lies plain and simple”.

Comey told a Senate committee they were wrong to denigrate the agency and its leadership.

He was also “confused” by the “shifting explanations” for his sacking, which came as he led a probe into any links between the Trump campaign and Moscow.

President Donald Trump later said he never sought to impede the inquiry.

Trump’s attorney, Marc Kasowitz, said in a statement Comey’s testimony “finally confirmed publicly” that the president was not under investigation as part of any probe in Russian political meddling.

James Comey

In the statement, Trump also denied asking Comey for his loyalty or to drop an investigation into fired national security adviser Michael Flynn during private meetings.

In his testimony, Comey said Trump had repeatedly told him he was doing a “great” job.

He also suggested he was fired to “change the way the Russia investigation was being conducted”.

The former FBI boss remained largely composed throughout almost three hours of testimony but became impassioned when delivering his opening remarks.

He told the panel that the White House “chose to defame me, and more importantly the FBI” by claiming the agency was “poorly led”.

“Those were lies, plain and simple. And I’m so sorry that the FBI workforce had to hear them,” he continued.

“The FBI is honest. The FBI is strong. And the FBI is and always will be independent,” he said in his opening remarks.

Comey was leading one of several Russia investigations before Trump fired him.

US intelligence agencies believe Russia interfered in the US election and they are investigating alleged links between the Trump campaign and Moscow.

But there is no known evidence of collusion and President Donald Trump has dismissed the story as “fake news”.

His spokeswoman Sarah Sanders on Thursday hit back at Comey, saying: “I can definitively say the president is not a liar.”

During Thursday’s testimony, Comey emphasised that Russia’s political meddling was “not a close call”, adding: “There should be no fuzz on this whatsoever.”

When asked by the Senate Intelligence Committee whether the president tried to stop the Russia investigation, Comey said: “Not to my understanding, no.”

He said he it was not for him to say whether Trump’s actions were an obstruction of justice.

Democratic Senator Mark Warner, the committee’s vice chairman, pressed Comey on why he decided to keep a record of his conversations with Trump.

“I was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting” he said.

Comey, who published his prepared remarks a day before the hearing, detailed one meeting with Trump in which the president asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions and White House aide Jared Kushner to leave the Oval Office.

“I knew something was about to happen that I needed to pay very close attention to,” he said. “I remember thinking that that was a very disturbing development.”

During another meeting with Trump, Comey said the president appealed to him to “let go” an investigation into fired national security adviser Michael Flynn and his ties to the Kremlin.

After US media reported the conversation, the president warned Comey in a tweet, saying he “better hope there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations”.

Comey told the committee he hoped there were tapes, calling on Trump to release them.

“The president surely knows whether he taped me, and if he did my feelings aren’t hurt. Release all the tapes, I’m good with it,” he said.

The White House has refused to say whether any such tapes exist.

After Trump’s tweet about potential tapes, Comey said he realised it was important to release his own account of the story.

He revealed that he asked a “good friend of mine” who is a professor at Columbia Law School to share contents of the memo with a reporter, in order to build pressure for a special counsel.

As a result of this episode, former FBI chief Robert Mueller was appointed as special counsel to lead an independent investigation into the Trump campaign’s potential ties to the Kremlin.

Comey said he was “sure” Mueller was also looking at whether Trump obstructed justice.

Trump attacked Comey for leaking the documents, saying it showed that members of the US government are “actively attempting to undermine this administration”.